Masters 2026: The clever way pros and caddies prepare for Augusta National's confusing wind

2269284476

Augusta National

April 06, 2026
Save for later

AUGUSTA, Ga. — It's not just the speed of the greens, or their undulations, or the layout itself, or the gravity of the Masters Tournament that makes conquering Augusta National so difficult for players. It's the invisible threat posed on all who play the famed course.

The wind.

The wind doesn't just blow at Augusta National—or swirl, as caddie Ted Scott explained to Golf.com—it hides from you. The trees obscure what players feel. It means the flagstick isn't much help, either. Yet the moment the ball peaks above the Georgia pines, it gets slapped in a strange direction.

So how do you plan for something you can't see or feel?

Marcus Svensson, the founder of the Tour Wind app who works with players to customize the info to their game, explained the clever way that players account for this.

"At Augusta, the trees are laid in a specific way where you really can't trust what you feel," Svensson says. "The closer players get to their tee time, I tell them to look at the wind forecast for the next five hours, and write down the hour-by-hour forecast and direction in the course guide."

Svensson contends using the Windy app, and plotting these hour-by-hour forecasts, rather than relying on feel can make a bigger difference than you think.

For instance, it's not the most windy day out there on Monday, but here's the wind forecast in the morning: it's blowing on average about 8.5 mph directly out of the north.

That wind direction means players, for example, have to navigate a right-to-left crosswind on the 15th hole, and play the 18th hole directly into the wind.

/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2022/IMG_1761.PNG

Yet later in the day, the wind direction switches. Now it's blowing out of the northeast about a mile per hour less. Now the 15th hole is playing almost directly downwind, and the 18th hole is more across.

/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2022/IMG_1762.PNG

Apply the generally accepted wind formula to these situations (which you can find here), and you can see how big a difference it makes on each of these shots.

We'll use a 150-yard shot to keep the math convenient …

18th hole

Morning: 8.5 mph Headwind = -12.75 yds

Afternoon: 8.5 mph Crosswind = -5.7 yds

15th hole

Morning: 8.5 mph Crosswind = -6.4 yds

Afternoon: 8.5 mph Crosswind = +5.7 yds

Subtle differences, but important ones. And those can often be the difference at the Masters.